In your first post, you said “do nothing” and “no bringing elbow around,” which made me think you were talking about a dead release. However, even using a dead release, one should still bring the elbow around until it is behind the arrow. In a dead release, movement stops at that point as you hold with balanced pulling and just aim “until the shot goes off.” With a dynamic release, as taught by Arne and Rod, you do “something” other than aim during the hold, which is to continue increasing back tension. This is what causes your string hand to recoil backwards on release. With a dead release, you still have some backwards recoiling of the hand, just not as much as with a dynamic release.